A three-fielding Panels LTD survey of likely Israeli voters shows the U.S. alliance treated as near-sacred, the Abraham Accords holding at 75%, and a future Saudi deal at 70%, while opposition to a two-state solution hardened to 69%.
78% of likely Israeli voters describe U.S. support as critical for Israel future, with the Abraham Accords backed by 75% and a future Israel-Saudi agreement by 70%, according to Council for a Secure America polling conducted by Panels LTD across three fieldings: July 2024, February 2025, and August 2025.
The August 2025 fielding occurred after the June 2025 Israel-Iran 12-Day War and during the second year of the Israel-Hamas war, with 79% of respondents reporting they or a family member served in active or reserve duty since October 7, 2023.
- 93% of Israeli voters describe the U.S.-Israel relationship as important.Near unanimous across all three fieldings.
- 78% say U.S. support is critical for Israel future.Up from 74% in July 2024; peaked at 83% in February 2025.
- The Abraham Accords are backed by 75% of Israeli voters.Statistically stable across three fieldings. Among Israelis under 44, support rises to 81%.
- A future Israel-Saudi agreement holds majority support at 70%.Down from an 80% peak in February 2025. Support reaches 78% among Israelis under 44.
- Opposition to a two-state solution hardened to 69%.Up from 64% in February 2025. Among Israelis aged 45 and older, opposition reaches 73%.
Across Three Fieldings
The three surveys span one of the most consequential thirteen-month period in Israeli security since the founding of the state in 1948. The July 2024 polling was fielded nine months after the October 7, 2023 attacks and ahead of the September 2024 death of Hezbollah Secretary-General Hassan Nasrallah and the December 2024 fall of the Assad regime. The February 2025 fielding followed the January 2025 ceasefire-and-hostage agreement. The August 2025 fielding occurred after the June 2025 Israel-Iran 12-Day War and during continued operations in Gaza.
Across this period, Israeli voter sentiment on the U.S. alliance, the Abraham Accords, and Saudi Arabia stayed stable, while views on the two-state solution lost support.
| Question | Jul 2024 | Feb 2025 | Aug 2025 | Δ Aug vs Jul |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| In your opinion, how important or not important do you think the State of Israel’s relationship is with the United States? (Total Important) | 92% | 96% | 93% | +1 |
| Which of the following statements comes closest to your own views? (“The support of the U.S. for the State of Israel is critical for Israel’s future”) | 74% | 83% | 78% | +4 |
| Do you support or oppose the two state solution — a Palestinian state next to the State of Israel — as the solution to the Israeli–Palestinian conflict? (Support) | 15% | 17% | 17% | +2 |
| Do you support or oppose the two state solution — a Palestinian state next to the State of Israel — as the solution to the Israeli–Palestinian conflict? (Oppose) | 65% | 64% | 69% | +4 |
| Do you support or oppose the diplomatic agreements between Israel and the UAE, Bahrain, Sudan, and Morocco — the agreements known as the Abraham Accords? (Support) | 77% | 79% | 75% | −2 |
| Do you support or oppose a future diplomatic agreement between Israel and Saudi Arabia? (Support) | 75% | 80% | 70% | −5 |
93% of Israelis Call the U.S. Relationship Important
In your opinion, how important or not important do you think the State of Israel relationship is with the United States?
93% of likely Israeli voters describe the U.S.-Israel relationship as important in August 2025, statistically unchanged from 92% in July 2024 and 96% in February 2025. 5% describe the relationship as not important. The 87-point gap between important and not important is consistent across all three fieldings.
78% Say U.S. Support Is Critical for Israel Future
Which of the following statements comes closest to your own views?
78% of likely Israeli voters describe U.S. support as critical for Israel future in August 2025, up from 74% in July 2024. The February 2025 fielding peaked at 83%, coinciding with the January 2025 ceasefire-and-hostage agreement. 13% say U.S. support is not critical for Israel future across both 2025 waves.
When asked to name Israel top ally, 86% of Israeli voters answer the United States as a first response.
Opposition to a Two-State Solution Hardened to 69%
Do you support or oppose the two-state solution, a Palestinian state next to the State of Israel, as the solution to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict?
69% of likely Israeli voters oppose a two-state solution in August 2025, up from 65% in July 2024 and 64% in February 2025. Support holds at 17% across the two 2025 waves. The don't know share fell from 20% to 14% across the three waves.
Among Israelis aged 45 and older, opposition reaches 73%; among those under 44, opposition holds at 64%. The post-October 7 security environment hardened rather than softened views on a Palestinian state.
The Abraham Accords Remain at 75% Support
Do you support or oppose the diplomatic agreements between Israel and the UAE, Bahrain, Sudan, and Morocco, the agreements known as the Abraham Accords?
75% of likely Israeli voters support the Abraham Accords in August 2025, statistically unchanged from 77% in July 2024 and 79% in February 2025. Opposition holds between 4% and 7% across all three fieldings.
Among Israelis under 44, support reaches 81%; among those 45 and older, 69%.
A Future Israel-Saudi Agreement Holds at 70%
Do you support or oppose a future diplomatic agreement between Israel and Saudi Arabia?
70% of likely Israeli voters support a future Israel-Saudi agreement in August 2025, down from 80% in February 2025 and 75% in July 2024. Opposition rose from 6% to 10% across the three waves.
Among Israelis under 44, support reaches 78%; among those 45 and older, 63%. The 15-point generational gap is the largest in the Saudi data.
The Generational Split on Normalization
Do you support or oppose the Abraham Accords and a future Israel-Saudi agreement? (By age cohort, August 2025)
Israelis under 44 back the Abraham Accords at 81% and a future Saudi-Israel deal at 78%. Israelis aged 45 and older back the Accords at 69% and the Saudi track at 63%. The 12-point and 15-point cohort gaps are inverted from the two-state solution, where older voters are more strongly opposed.
Bottom Line
The August 2025 fielding shows Israeli voter sentiment on the U.S. alliance and the normalization track holding through two years of multi-front war. The Abraham Accords sit at 75% support after the war that critics predicted would destroy them. A future Saudi agreement holds at 70% despite a 10-point dip from the February peak. 78% describe U.S. support as critical for Israel future.
The data argues that the Abraham Accords are functioning as a generational realignment rather than a fragile diplomatic artifact. Israeli voters under 44 back the Accords at 81% and a future Saudi deal at 78%, the strongest pro-normalization cohort in the survey. The 69% opposition to a two-state solution constrains what is politically possible inside Israel but does not constrain bilateral normalization, which the same respondents endorse overwhelmingly. For U.S. policy, the implication is that the Peace Through Prosperity sequence, practical security and economic cooperation precedes formal Palestinian-state resolution, is supported by Israeli public opinion across all three fieldings.
Read in full
The full polling deck
The full polling deck. July 2024, February 2025, and August 2025 waves.
Survey Methods
CSA commissioned Panels LTD to field the Israel Public Opinion Survey across three fieldings: 612 likely Israeli voters in July 2024 (July 8-10), 529 in February 2025 (February 2-4), and 613 in August 2025 (August 28-30). Samples were drawn from Panels LTD online panel of over 30,000 active Israeli members, supplemented with cellphone and landline contacts and Hebrew-language outreach to Haredi communities.
Respondents were filtered to likely voters by self-identification as 2022 Knesset voters (98%) or as newly eligible (2%). Quotas on age, gender, geography, heritage, and religiosity were applied per Israeli Central Bureau of Statistics data. The margin of sampling error is approximately 4.0 percentage points at the 95% confidence level.